Vaccines Stocks List

Vaccines Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Apr 26 MRNA Moderna (MRNA) Surpasses Market Returns: Some Facts Worth Knowing
Apr 26 MRNA Arvinas, Inc. (ARVN) Expected to Beat Earnings Estimates: Can the Stock Move Higher?
Apr 26 MRNA Should You Buy Moderna Before May 12?
Apr 26 MRK Investor Sentiment Improves Slightly, But Dow Tumbles Over 350 Points
Apr 25 ALT Altimmune Statement on the Passing of Dr. Stephen Harrison
Apr 25 MRK Merck (MRK) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
Apr 25 MRK Merck Stock Gains On Its Blockbuster Cancer Drug Keytruda, Raises Annual Outlook
Apr 25 MRK Merck & Co., Inc. (MRK) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
Apr 25 MRNA What's Going On With Pfizer Stock On Thursday?
Apr 25 MRK Merck (MRK) Q1 Earnings Top, Cancer Drug Keytruda Boosts Sales
Apr 25 MRK Heard on the Street: Bristol-Myers Goes From Big Pharma to Little Pharma
Apr 25 MRK 20 Fastest Growing Health Tech Companies in the World
Apr 25 MRK Merck raises 2024 guidance on cancer drug demand
Apr 25 MRK Meta Falls 15% On Great Earnings, Tesla Rises 12% On Ugly Earnings – Here Is The Real Reason
Apr 25 MRNA Analysts Estimate Moderna (MRNA) to Report a Decline in Earnings: What to Look Out for
Apr 25 MRNA UPDATE 3-GlaxoSmithKline sues Pfizer and BioNTech over Covid-19 vaccine technology
Apr 25 MRK Merck Stock Climbs After Higher-Than-Expected Sales of Cancer Drug Keytruda
Apr 25 MRK Merck raises guidance as Keytruda sales jump 20% in Q1
Apr 25 MRK UPDATE 3-Merck raises 2024 profit forecast on surging sales of cancer drug Keytruda
Apr 25 MRNA Moderna To Present Respiratory & Cytomegalovirus Research at the ESCMID Global Congress
Vaccines

A vaccine is a biological preparation that provides active acquired immunity to a particular disease. A vaccine typically contains an agent that resembles a disease-causing microorganism and is often made from weakened or killed forms of the microbe, its toxins, or one of its surface proteins. The agent stimulates the body's immune system to recognize the agent as a threat, destroy it, and to further recognize and destroy any of the microorganisms associated with that agent that it may encounter in the future. Vaccines can be prophylactic (example: to prevent or ameliorate the effects of a future infection by a natural or "wild" pathogen), or therapeutic (e.g., vaccines against cancer are being investigated).The administration of vaccines is called vaccination. Vaccination is the most effective method of preventing infectious diseases; widespread immunity due to vaccination is largely responsible for the worldwide eradication of smallpox and the restriction of diseases such as polio, measles, and tetanus from much of the world.
The effectiveness of vaccination has been widely studied and verified; for example, vaccines that have proven effective include the influenza vaccine, the HPV vaccine, and the chicken pox vaccine. The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that licensed vaccines are currently available for twenty-five different preventable infections.The terms vaccine and vaccination are derived from Variolae vaccinae (smallpox of the cow), the term devised by Edward Jenner to denote cowpox. He used it in 1798 in the long title of his Inquiry into the Variolae vaccinae known as the Cow Pox, in which he described the protective effect of cowpox against smallpox. In 1881, to honor Jenner, Louis Pasteur proposed that the terms should be extended to cover the new protective inoculations then being developed.

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